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Taiwan skywatchers spot blazing 'space junk' over Taitung

05/28/2026 12:59 PM
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A dazzling piece of space junk, resembling a meteor, streaks across the night sky over Taitung on Wednesday. Photo courtesy of Formosan Naruwan Hotel Resort Taitung
A dazzling piece of space junk, resembling a meteor, streaks across the night sky over Taitung on Wednesday. Photo courtesy of Formosan Naruwan Hotel Resort Taitung

Taipei, May 28 (CNA) A brilliant streak of light resembling a meteor illuminated the skies over eastern Taiwan on Wednesday night, with images captured in Taitung County showing what experts said was likely space debris burning through the atmosphere.

The event was captured by livestream cameras stationed along Taitung's east coast and at the Xiangyang mountain pass on the Southern Cross-Island Highway.

Footage showed a glowing fireball slowly traversing the night sky for about 15 seconds before splitting into two fiery fragments and disappearing.

Liu Chih-an (劉志安), a director of the Taipei Amateur Astronomers Association, told CNA on Thursday that the object was not a meteor but most likely space debris from a man-made object such as a satellite or rocket.

Liu said artificial objects entering the atmosphere typically move more slowly and often break apart during the final stage of re-entry, unlike meteors, which usually remain intact unless they are particularly large.

Despite its artificial origins, the celestial display sparked widespread discussion on Taiwanese social media platforms, particularly Threads.

Because the object streaked across the sky for an unusually long 15 seconds -- far longer than a typical shooting star -- netizens flooded social media with jokes about making the most of the moment.

"Fifteen seconds is long enough to make a lot of wishes!" one user joked, while others humorously wondered whether wishes still counted if the object was merely space junk.

(By Lu Tai-cheng and Evelyn Kao)

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